Stu’s info is very interesting indeed….. I have had a few problems with motorcycle batteries over the past few seasons. In Canada, a decent Yuasa agm/lead acid battery is usually priced over $200cdn. And the warranty seems to be 12mths. I have had 2 conventional batteries fail just after the warranty ended and had to decide if I wanted to go down that route again. I have since discovered that Noco offers a Ytz14s style battery for around $200-220cdn price range. With a 5 year warranty. I believe it is probably a pro rated type though. I had one Noco lithium just fail but was 4 years old. Noco replaced the battery free of charge. I’m not sure if that is there normal procedure or I just got lucky on it.
Regarding the charging….. when I spoke to Noco about regulator charge rates, the rep simply stated that the BMS(management system) is the factor. The rep wasnt concerned at all if the regulator put out slightly higher voltage(lead acid rate of approx 14.5v) because the lithium BMS should be able deal with it.
So I have crossed my fingers and have replaced 3 Noco lithiums installed in various bikes when the conventional batteries have failed. Hopefully this is a good decision.
A few notes on the Noco units and I believe the Anti Gravity units and maybe all Lithiums…..
1) is that they go into a “sleep mode” when they get down to approx 12.5-12.7V( I think this is the value). This is to save enough voltage for a start. To wake up the battery, you have to put a slight charge on the battery. In the Noco and Anti Gravity units, a 9volt battery will wake them up supposedly. So I carry a 9v battery with an adapter cord that plugs into my 2 pin charge cord.
2) you have to a have a proper “lithium charge rate” charger or tender
3) the batteries have multiple connection points on the terminals. So you have options if connecting multiple wires to battery as opposed to 1 connection.
Hopefully the above helps….
Sorry for the long winded post!!!!